Ford announces $1.2 billion in projects that would create 130 jobs after Trump tweets about a 'major investment'

Ford on Tuesday said it would invest $1.2 billion in three Michigan facilities and create 130 jobs in projects largely in line with a previous agreement with the United Auto Workers union, hours after US President Donald Trump touted a "major investment" by the automaker on Twitter.

In January, Ford scrapped plans to build a $1.6 billion car factory in Mexico and instead added 700 jobs in Michigan following Trump's criticism that centered on trade and investing in America.

Ford on Tuesday said it would spend $850 million on a planned upgrade of a plant in Wayne, Michigan, for the Ford Bronco, an SUV model, and the Ford Ranger — a midsize pickup truck. The company will also invest $150 million and create 130 jobs at an engine plant in Romeo.

Both projects were part of 2015 negotiations with the UAW.

Ford also said it would invest $200 million in a data center in Flat Rock to support advances in vehicle connectivity and future developments in autonomous vehicles.

The move comes at a time when sales of new cars and trucks in the US are at an all-time high and investors are watching closely for signs of a possible downturn in the highly cyclical industry.

"We're optimistic that we'll continue to see good economic growth for the US in the near term," Joe Hinrichs, the president of the Americas at Ford, told Reuters. "We feel very confident about our plan and our products and about investing in Michigan and the US."

The Michigan Economic Development Corporation is set to approve new state incentives for Ford at a meeting Tuesday.

The announcement by Ford comes less than two weeks after Trump visited Detroit to promise more auto jobs for Michigan and other Midwestern US states.

Trump pounced on Ford's announcement before the company could release its plans Tuesday.

"Major investment to be made in three Michigan plants," Trump posted on Twitter early Tuesday. "Car companies coming back to U.S. JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!"

Trump has at times promoted job announcements at the White House that had been previously planned or announced. Last week he praised an investment decision by Charter Communications Inc. that the company announced before he was elected.

Ford said last week it expected higher investments, as well as other spending, to weigh on 2017 earnings.

US sales of new cars and trucks hit a record high of 17.55 million units in 2016. On Friday, the industry consultants J.D. Power and LMC Automotive maintained their 2017 sales forecast of 17.6 million vehicles, an increase of 0.2% from 2016.

But they said automakers' incentive spending in the US in the first half of March had hit a record for the month, breaking the mark set in March 2009 during the height of the Great Recession.

On Monday, Moody's Investors service said it expected US new-vehicle sales to dip in 2017 and warned of a "significant credit risk" for auto lenders as competition for loans intensifies.

Trump has focused on US automotive jobs, meeting with company executives as well as pressuring — and praising — them on Twitter. Executives have also said they hope his administration will pursue tax and regulatory policies that would benefit US manufacturers.